On the "Executive Decision" segment of Mad Money Friday night, Jim Cramer sat down with Coca-Cola Co. Cramer wanted to know what's behind the transformation of this iconic company. "It's the sum of a lot of work over a number of years," Quincey explained.

Quincey, a native of the United Kingdom, oversaw Coca-Cola's recent acquisition of UK-based coffee chain Costa. Doing so is part of Coca-Cola's new coffee business, which is divided into three parts, Quincey told CNBC's Jim Cramer in an interview aired Friday. The biggest of the three coffee groups is immediate consumption, and Costa operates a business of high-end coffee vending machines that are found in gas stations, shopping malls and even movie theaters.

In a volatile market, Coca-Cola (NYSE:KO) stock has remained a bedrock of stability. Note that during the past ten years KO stock has posted an average annual return of 10.54%. Of course, past performance is no guarantee of future performance, but in the case of Coke it does look like there will continue to be steady growth.

Coca-Cola President and CEO James Quincey speaks to CNBC's Jim Cramer in a wide-ranging interview about the company's global strategy. Coca-Cola's $5.1 billion acquisition of coffee chain Costa wasn't intended to compete directly with Starbucks, Quincey says. The CEO also opines on the burgeoning cannabis industry and what it would take for Coca-Cola to get involved.

After years of commuting downtown, across town and through Cobb County every day, I decided to forget the commute. When I started my own business in 2005, a design studio focused on brand identity, I decided I preferred working where I lived, in Cherokee County.

This article is for investors who would like to improve their understanding of price to earnings ratios (P/E ratios). To keep it practical, we’ll show how The Coca-Cola Company’s (NYSE:KO) Read More...

At the beginning of 2018, the Trump Administration raised the pitch on trade issues and imposed tariffs on washing machines and solar panels. The rhetoric was raised to the next level with the Section 232 tariffs came into effect in March. The tariffs were meant t0 boost US steel and aluminum production.